Ghrelin plays a minor role in the physiological control of cardiac function in the rat.
Torsello. Antonio A; Bresciani. Elena E; Rossoni. Giuseppe G; Avallone. Roberta R; Tulipano. Giovanni G; Cocchi. Daniela D; Bulgarelli. Ilaria I; Deghenghi. Romano R; Berti. Ferruccio F; Locatelli. Vittorio V
Key Findings
- Hexarelin pretreatment markedly reduced heart damage after ischemia‑reperfusion in rats
- Ghrelin provided far less cardioprotection than hexarelin
- Immunizing against ghrelin didn’t increase damage, indicating ghrelin’s minor role; hexarelin’s effects involve CD36
Practical Outcomes
- Hexarelin shows promise as a heart‑protective agent in animal studies, but there’s no human dosing or safety data yet. Biohackers should view this as early‑stage evidence and wait for more research before considering supplementation.
Summary
In rats, giving the synthetic peptide hexarelin for a week before heart stress helped protect the heart much better than the natural hormone ghrelin, but blocking ghrelin didn’t make things worse, so ghrelin isn’t a major player in heart control. The protection from hexarelin seems linked to a protein called CD36, not just its usual receptor.
Abstract
We have previously reported that a 7-d pretreatment with hexarelin, a synthetic ligand of the GH secretagogue receptor (GHS-R), largely prevented damages induced by ischemia and reperfusion in isolated rat hearts. Our aim was to ascertain whether ghrelin, an endogenous ligand of the GHS-R, is physiologically endowed with cardioprotective activity. Hypophysectomized rats were treated in vivo for 7 d with either ghrelin (320 microg/kg) or hexarelin (80 microg/kg), and their hearts were subjected in vitro to the ischemia and reperfusion procedure. Ghrelin was far less effective than hexarelin in preventing increases in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (15% and 60% protection for ghrelin and hexarelin, respectively), coronary perfusion pressure (10% and 45% reduction), and release of creatine kinase in the heart perfusate (15% and 55% reduction). In the second experiment, normal rats were passively immunized against ghrelin for 21 d before the ischemia and reperfusion procedure. In these isolated hearts, the ischemia-reperfusion damage was not significantly increased compared with control rats. After hypophysectomy, CD36 mRNA levels significantly increased, whereas those of atrial natriuretic factor significantly decreased. We conclude that: 1) ghrelin plays a minor role in the control of heart function; and 2) hexarelin effects are mediated in part by the GHS-R and largely by interactions with the CD36.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
10.1210/en.2002-221048